Fawn Brodie reports that "it is said that Eli Johnson demanded that the prophet be castrated."
Fawn Brodie, No Man Knows My History (New York: Vintage Books, 1945), 119
It is said that Eli Johnson demanded that the prophet be castrated, for he suspected Joseph of being too intimate with his sister, Nancy Marinda. But the doctor who had been persuaded to join the mob declined the responsibility at the last, and Johnson had to be content with seeing the prophet beaten senseless. Rigdon likewise was beaten and dragged into unconsciousness over the frozen ground.